Ryan Lochte: “One of the Hardest Sets I’ve Ever Done.”

This was originally published over at YourSwimBook.com. Sign up for Olivier’s weekly motivational newsletter for swimmers by clicking here.

Ryan Lochte’s work ethic in the pool is second to none. For #TBT we are going show a set from 2012 he describes as one of the hardest he has ever done.

The fastest swimmers in the world are fascinating to watch.

The unrelenting power and skill that the best of the best display is particularly impressive, with swimmers like Ryan Lochte who manage to make even fellow international level swimmers appear pedestrian by comparison.

And for those of us who marvel at the way top swimmers perform when they race, we are equally awed and intrigued by the feats they perform in practice.

Fast Swimmers Crush Their Swim Practices

Great swimmers don’t just swim fast and perform well when it comes to competition, but they also do serious work when it comes to practice.

And Ryan Lochte, who possesses a range and versatility sculpted from thousands and thousands of miles of training, is no exception.

 

Before Lochte moved to North Carolina to swim at SwimMAC under coach David Marsh he trained under Gregg Troy at the University of Florida, where weeks of 70,000m in the pool were not uncommon.

A protocol of high yardage has helped Lochte build the insane conditioning that allows him to race multiple events at high level meets, not the least of which is the punishing 400m individual medley, an eveng in which he’s the defending Olympic Champion.

During the run-up to the 2012 London Olympics, Lochte’s work at Florida was its zenith.

In an afternoon workout in March a couple months before US Olympic Trials he did the following swim workout, which he would later characterize as “brutal”, which is saying something given Lochte’s capacity for work.

Ryan-Lochte-IM-Set

 

Here is the workout:

4 rounds through—

  • 2×100 butterfly from a dive all-out @1:30
  • 2×50 backstroke, 1 all-out, 1 cruise @:50
  • 100 freestyle @1:20
  • 400 IM all-out @5

Notes:

  • The workout was done in long course meters.
  • Just the set was 3,200 meters (not including warm-up and warm-down).
  • Lochte’s times on the 400 individual medleys were as follows: 4:29, 4:29, 4:28, and 4:27.
  • If you weren’t hungry before this set, you will most certainly will be afterward.

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MikeS
7 years ago

Two thoughts
The historian in me says Tim McKee was a virtual tie in 1972 at 4:31 which make those swims amazing
BUT
The coach in me says
My swimmer looses in breastroke to the other guy…
Where’s the model for the improvement in that race?
Just saying “cmon Ryan! The definition of insanity…”

PACFAN
7 years ago

Woah. 4:20s are still seen as good in-season RACES. Not practice times. Well that shows what you have to be capable of to throw down a 4:05 textile. Jeez.

About Olivier Poirier-Leroy

Olivier Poirier-Leroy

Olivier Poirier-Leroy has been involved in competitive swimming for most of his life. Starting off at the age of 6 he was thrown in the water at the local pool for swim lessons and since then has never wanted to get out. A nationally top ranked age grouper as both a …

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